Preliminary Study of the Implications of 3D Printing on the Construction Supply Chain (2020-07)¶
Ramani Ayyagari,
Contribution - Proceedings of the 2nd RILEM International Conference on Concrete and Digital Fabrication, pp. 1051-1063
Abstract
Construction projects face several challenges, such as budget overruns, project delays, rework, and waste of materials. Most of them are caused by lengthy and complex supply chains involving multiple entities, processes, and interactions. Studies suggest that technologies like robotics, 3D printing, and artificial intelligence have the potential to reduce the complexity of traditional supply chains. In the context of 3D concrete printing, researchers have focused on the robotic systems and suitable construction materials. However, limited attention was focused on the impact on the construction supply chain (CSC). Although studies in healthcare and aviation investigated the implications of new technologies in their supply chains, the outcome cannot be directly applied to the CSC. In addition, studies that assessed the impact of new technologies on the CSC are limited and mostly qualitative. This study addresses this gap by developing a methodology to simulate the implications of 3D printing on the CSC. The methodology adopted contains four elements: 1) Develop supply chain networks, b) Identify input parameters c) Simulate the supply chain networks, and d) Analyze and discuss results. Results from this preliminary study indicate 15.8% and 52.6% lesser entities in CSC-2 and CSC-3, respectively, when compared to CSC-1; a 0.2% and 28.2% decrease in overall effort in CSC-2 and CSC-3, respectively, when compared to CSC-1; and an overall cumulative performance increase of 18.5% and 51.6% in CSC-2 and CSC-3, respectively, when compared to CSC-1. Findings from this study can help construction professionals to understand the implications of 3D printing in the CSC and to assist in easier adoption into the industry. However, caution should be exercised when generalizing to other CSC scenarios or the entire construction industry.
¶
3 References
- Kothman Ivo, Faber Niels (2016-09)
How 3D Printing Technology Changes the Rules of the Game:
Insights from the Construction Sector - Lim Sungwoo, Buswell Richard, Le Thanh, Austin Simon et al. (2011-07)
Developments in Construction-Scale Additive Manufacturing Processes - Soto Borja, Agustí-Juan Isolda, Joss Samuel, Hunhevicz Jens (2019-05)
Implications of Construction 4.0 to the Workforce and Organizational Structures
3 Citations
- Özdemir Salih, Alaçam Sema (2025-11)
Cognitive Ecosystem for Lifecycle-Adaptive and Sustainable 3D Concrete Printing - Ma Jiayue, Samarasinghe Don, Rotimi James, Zou Kelvin (2024-06)
Supply Chain Landscape of 3D Printed Buildings:
A Stakeholder Decision Support Framework - Besklubova Svetlana, Tan Bing, Zhong Ray, Spicek Nikola (2023-04)
Logistic-Cost-Analysis for 3D Printing Construction Projects Using a Multi-Stage Network-Based Approach
BibTeX
@inproceedings{rama_soto.2020.PSotIo3PotCSC,
author = "Ayyagari Ramani and Borja García de Soto",
title = "Preliminary Study of the Implications of 3D Printing on the Construction Supply Chain",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-030-49916-7_101",
year = "2020",
volume = "28",
pages = "1051--1063",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 2nd RILEM International Conference on Concrete and Digital Fabrication: Digital Concrete 2020",
editor = "Freek Paul Bos and Sandra Simaria de Oliveira Lucas and Robert Johannes Maria Wolfs and Theo A. M. Salet",
}
Formatted Citation
A. Ramani and B. G. de Soto, “Preliminary Study of the Implications of 3D Printing on the Construction Supply Chain”, in Proceedings of the 2nd RILEM International Conference on Concrete and Digital Fabrication: Digital Concrete 2020, 2020, vol. 28, pp. 1051–1063. doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-49916-7_101.
Ramani, Ayyagari, and Borja García de Soto. “Preliminary Study of the Implications of 3D Printing on the Construction Supply Chain”. In Proceedings of the 2nd RILEM International Conference on Concrete and Digital Fabrication: Digital Concrete 2020, edited by Freek Paul Bos, Sandra Simaria de Oliveira Lucas, Robert Johannes Maria Wolfs, and Theo A. M. Salet, 28:1051–63, 2020. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-49916-7_101.